A little bit about Mesu...
Mesu Andrews' deep understanding of and love for God’s Word brings the biblical world alive for her readers. She and her husband, Roy, live in a log cabin snuggled into the beautiful Appalachian Mountains with their dog, Zeke. The Andrews' have two married daughters and a small tribe of grandkids. Mesu loves movies, football, waterfalls, and travel.
Connect with Mesu...
Please visit http://www.mesuandrews.com/ to order free bookmarks, download Bible studies or group discussion questions.
Facebook: Mesu Andrews
Twitter: MesuAndrews
Pinterest: MesuAndrews
Goodreads: Mesu Andrews
Google+: Mesu Andrews
Instagram: Mesu Andrews
Get to know Mesu...
You and Writing
Tell us a little bit about yourself...
I never intended to be a writer. In fact, I read my first full novel in my late twenties (don’t even ask how I got A’s in high school Lit classes). As an off-the-charts extrovert, I was always too busy talking to sit still and read a book—let alone write one!
Until an annoying flu-bug hit in 1996, I was a healthy, happy pastor’s wife with two elementary-aged girls. Just a harmless little virus, right? Nope. After a fever of 102ยบ for six days, it finally broke, but the other symptoms didn’t go away. After a month of prolonged aching joints and muscles, brain fog, and fatigue, I returned to the doctor to find every test result within normal range. During the year it took to be diagnosed with fibromyalgia, I began journaling daily for the first time in my life.
Fast-forward to July 2002. I’d learned to manage fibromyalgia with exercise and medication—so I thought. My life had grown crazy again with a busy speaking schedule, a husband who was both full-time pastor and full-time PhD student, and two very active teenage daughters. I woke one morning unable to move my arms and legs and barely able to breathe, so I whispered a cry for help. Once again, medical science had no answers. My blood work showed some anomalies, but nothing conclusive. I spent six months in bed with a laptop as my best friend. I wrote my first book. Writing saved my sanity.
My stamina never returned, and in 2005 I spent two weeks at Mayo Clinic where they diagnosed four chronic issues. If I didn’t have writing, I would feel pretty useless. One day of “normal” activity wears me out. Though I still enjoy speaking occasionally for retreats and conferences, I must rest the following week to recover. Writing makes me feel like I’m still very much involved in reaching folks with Jesus’ Word. I can sit in my cushioned chair for hours during a day and love people through words. It’s a joy and privilege to serve my Jesus in this way!
Your Writing
Tell us a little bit about your book....
Miriam is a fascinating character for many reasons. She’s the first woman to be deemed “prophetess” in Scripture and yet God chooses her brothers—not her—as His instruments to deliver the Israelites from Egypt. As I read about the ten plagues and the Exodus, keeping in mind that Miriam, Aaron, and Moses were all over eighty years old, I pondered how the “octogenarians” in my life today would have handled all that upheaval and change.
My mom was Miriam’s age at the writing of this book. How would Mom have reacted to uprooting her life and leaving the only house she’s ever lived in? What would my mom have thought if God suddenly sent frogs to fill her house, her oven, and every nook and cranny without any explanation? I wanted to write this book from the perspective of those who—unlike Moses—didn’t have that 1-800-GOD hotline to know what was coming.
However, as I wrote this book, I found that my favorite characters were the secondary ones, Eleazar and Taliah. Why? Because they asked the hard questions of Yahweh. They were the non-believers, the ones who either didn’t know God or had some knowledge but had turned away because of life’s disappointments and/or hardships. I found myself—through these two characters—asking questions that were too difficult to answer! And that became the unexpected theme of the book. A god we can understand or explain completely is man-made, an idol in essence. Yahweh, on the other hand, is God beyond comprehension, and every character in this book—as well as its author—had to reach that conclusion in order to cross the Red Sea.
It took countless pots of coffee and lots of revelations during my morning showers to let my characters struggle with answerless questions. I like neatly tied bows, but life isn’t like that, and neither is this story. It’s messy, but it’s victorious.
Writing
Let’s talk about your writing life...
When I started writing, I was convinced I should write Bible studies. I was a non-fiction girl through-and-through. I studied God’s Word like it was my job, taught adult Sunday school and women’s Bible studies, and spoke at every retreat and conference where someone gave me a microphone.
The first critiques of my fiction writing came from an editor and an agent. The editor said my writing was so bad I should stick with speaking, and the agent called my biblical fiction heresy. Ouch. When I finally worked up the courage to attend another conference, I proposed non-fiction, got an agent, and for three years she tried to find a publisher. Still no nibbles. My agent and I parted ways, and I registered for the 2008 Fiction Mentoring Clinic at Mt. Hermon with Gayle Roper as my mentor.
I submitted three very bad chapters of my novel on Solomon’s Song of Songs, and Revell’s editor happened to be looking for biblical fiction at that conference. The first day of the mentoring clinic, I realized how AWFUL my first draft was and expected to have the same terrible experience at my critique appointment. However, Revell’s editor knew I was being mentored by one of CBA’s best teachers and said she saw the seeds of a good storyteller in my writing. My first novel was published twelve years after that first horrifying writer’s conference.
I never counted rejection letters. I only count God’s intervention. It wasn’t my talent or skill that got my first contract. It was all God’s timing, His plan, and His grace. And every contract since then has been by the same reasons. When the contracts and book ideas stop coming, I’ll know this part of my ministry to the Body of Christ is over, and I’ll look for the next step in God’s plan for me.
You
What is a favorite memory you have of your mother?
For as long as I remember, my mom has been the strongest example of Christ I’ve known. When I was a rebellious teenager, she was a thorn in my side, but at the lowest points in my life, she’s been my earthly anchor in the storms. I was nineteen, an alcoholic, and had gone through a life-shaking break-up with the guy I’d been dating for five years. Mom had no idea I’d nearly taken my own life the night before, but the next morning she called me into her bedroom and asked me to sit down on her bed. She reached for my hand and held my gaze.
“I know you may not believe this, but I saw Jesus this morning,” she said. “He sat right here on my bed and told me you were going to be all right, darlin’.” She hugged me, and we cried together.
I didn’t believe a word she said, but a week later an old friend and I went to a football game together. Six weeks later that old friend led me to a saving relationship with Jesus Christ. Seven months later, I married that old friend. Now, I totally believe Jesus sat down on her bed that morning!
If you had to choose one type of food, what kind would it be?
Give me comfort food! Is that a category? I grew up in rural Indiana, and we raised our kids in northern Indiana Amish country, so I’m all about mashed potatoes, noodles, gravy, and fried anything! We moved to the Pacific Northwest where they eat grass and twigs, and I felt like a fish out of water, but we recently moved to the Appalachian Mountains, and I’m back in my element. Give me that southern home-cooking any day of the week and twice on Sunday—with a baked dessert please!
What are you currently reading?
I’m reading The Walls of Arad by Carole Towriss. She’s a dear friend, and this is her first self-published novel though it’s the third in her series. It’s wonderful! It continues the story of the Israelites at the end of their forty years of wandering, and I’m halfway through…just as they’re about ready to start taking the land of Canaan. Very exciting.
And I guarantee my next read will be biblical fiction! It’s my passion to read and to write. My favorite standbys are Tessa Afshar, Tosca Lee, Jill Smith, Lynn Austin, and any of Francine Rivers’ books, but since biblicals are making a comeback, I’ll be trying some of the new authors like Connilyn Cossette and Texie Susan Gregory. I’ve heard all good things about them! I’ll post reviews of the books I read in my monthly newsletter. You can sign up for it on my website (in the right-hand column of any page) and also get inside info on some of the other fun stuff going on in my writing life.
Thank you so much for being my guest Mesu! Readers, check out the amazing giveaway below and spread the new about this lovely book!!!
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Showing posts with label biblical fiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label biblical fiction. Show all posts
Wednesday, May 3, 2017
Wednesday, February 22, 2017
Barbara M. Britton {Writer Wednesday}
Barbara M. Britton lives in Wisconsin and loves the snow—when it accumulates under three inches. She writes Christian Fiction for teens and adults. Barb has a nutrition degree from Baylor University but loves to dip healthy strawberries in chocolate. Barb kicked off her Tribes of Israel series in October with the release of “Providence: Hannah’s Journey.”
Connect with Barbara...
Website: www.barbarambritton.com
Goodreads
Purchase: Building Benjamin: Naomi's Journey
Get to know Barbara...

You and Writing
People ask me if I always wanted to be a writer. I never thought in my wildest dreams that I would be an author. Being an author wasn’t encouraged, or even taught, on career day at my high school.
Many, many years later, I was teaching chapel at my sons’ school when I got the prompting to sit down and write. After all, I had been adapting curriculum and writing my own lesson plans, so writing a novel couldn’t be that much different. Right? Wrong. It took me nine years to get a book published because of the drastic learning curve in teaching myself how to write a book and then how to go about getting someone to publish it. I have to pinch myself that “Building Benjamin” is my second book to launch. A third book in my Tribes of Israel series is already contracted.
This certainly wasn’t the career path I had chosen for myself, but I love teaching about the Bible, and now I get to write about Bible stories. God always teaches me something new when I study His Word. I hope my fiction drives readers back to the original text—the Bible.
Your Writing
Why did you choose to write a story set in Judges 19-21?
I thought I knew my Bible well. I had taught about Deborah, Samson, and Gilead in Sunday School, but I guess I never read the ending to the book of Judges. I never knew the tribe of Benjamin had almost been wiped out by the other tribes of Israel, and that a crazy Sodom and Gomorrah-like story happened in these chapters. I was even crazier to set a love story in this chaos. But somehow it worked.
Do you have a favorite character in this work? If so, why?
Naomi is my main character, so I have to give her a shout out. She is brave and committed to her family and to God. Naomi’s friend Cuzbi was so much fun to write because I pictured her as a Valley Girl transported to Ancient Israel. Cuzbi speaks her mind even if the truth hurts, and she can be self-absorbed and tacky in an endearing sort of way.
What’s the theme? How did you come up with it?
My theme is; Love grows where God grafts the tender shoot. This story is an enemies to lovers story. Naomi has an embedded anger against the Benjamites because they killed her brothers. When she is abducted by Eliab, she is furious. Eliab is her enemy until she discovers that he isn’t as bad as she thought. If the tribe of Benjamin is going to survive, the remaining men need wives. Can Naomi put her feelings aside for the sake of her people? Only God can change her heart, but it will require some tough choices.
Was there a passage of scripture you came across or used while writing it that you’d like to share?
I have Naomi quote Deuteronomy 6:18a (NIV) when she doesn’t know what to do while she awaits a rescue, “Do what is right and good in the Lord’s sight, so it may go well with you.” This is a verse that should guide us today. Naomi seeks God’s wisdom when she feels lost to her family and to her tribe.
You and Writing
Let’s talk about your writing life...
How long did you write before you got published?
I wrote for nine years before my debut novel, “Providence: Hannah’s Journey” was published. Providence was the fourth book I had written, but my first work of Biblical fiction.
How many rejection letters did you get before being accepted by a publisher?
Over my first four books, including “Providence,” I received over 200 rejection letters. And I was told by industry professionals to write something different than Biblical fiction because it was a hard sell. But I absolutely love writing this genre.
What’s your encouragement for younger writers aside from “keep writing”? We hear this a lot, but dig deeper. Is there something else that helped you?
I joined professional writing organizations and I got involved in their local chapters. This network of writing friends has encouraged me along the difficult path of rejection (note the 200 earlier) and the bouts of doubting myself and my writing ability.
On a practical note, I keep a small daily planner at my computer and I write down everything I do to further my writing career. If there are too many blank squares, then I’m not being diligent with my writing. I can say at this point in time, there is never a blank square except on Sunday. Once you have a book published, you have to put on the publicity hat too, and that takes additional time.
You
All right, let’s keep things real:
Flowers or chocolate? …Or books?
Easy peasy. Chocolate! Dark chocolate is my favorite.
What’s your most memorable (good or bad) Valentines date or gift?
See my answer above. One Valentine’s Day, my husband gave me six, waxy, old chocolates from a no name chocolate company. He worked five minutes away from two of my favorite chocolate companies. Sigh. Needless to say, he went out and bought me my favorites. I know, I am a chocolate snob.
What are you currently reading?
This question can get me in trouble because I have several friends who are published. I read mostly Christian fiction stories that have a romantic thread. With that answer I won’t hurt any feelings.
Thanks again for inviting me, Emilie!
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Wednesday, April 1, 2015
Stephanie Landsem {Writer Wednesday}
A little bit about Stephanie...
Stephanie Landsem, author of The Living Water Series, writes historical fiction because she loves adventure in far-off times and places. In real life, she’s explored ancient ruins, medieval castles, and majestic cathedrals around the world. Stephanie is equally happy at home in Minnesota with her husband, four children, and three fat cats. When she’s not writing, she’s feeding the ravenous horde, avoiding housework, and dreaming about her next adventure—whether it be in person or on the page.
How to connect with Stephanie...
Website: www.stephanielandsem.com
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/6509583.Stephanie_Landsem
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/stephanielandsem
Twitter:https://twitter.com/#!/stephlandsem
Pinterest: http://pinterest.com/slandsem/
Purchase: The Tomb: A Novel of Martha (The Living Water Series)
Author Interview | Stephanie Landsem
You and Writing
What is one book or resource you would recommend to other writers? Why?
...I love using maps in my research. I’m very visual and maps—whether a modern arial view of the Jordan river or an ancient hand-drawn map of Jerusalem—give me a firm grounding in my setting. I couldn’t visualize my story without them.
...I just found a great map website that I could explore for hours, The David Rumsey Historic Map collection can be found here http://www.davidrumsey.com/home. Another fun map website is Old Maps Online: http://project.oldmapsonline.org/ I’d highly recommend spending some time with them as you plot and write.
Your Writing
Tell us a little bit about your book.
...I like to describe the Tomb, A Novel of Martha, as a surprising story of Martha, Mary, and Lazarus. As I say in an introductory letter at the front of the book:
...Like many women, I’ve always identified with Martha—the worrier, the worker—and as I suspected, she was my favorite character to write about in The Tomb. I loved exploring what made her so anxious because many women have some of the same hurts and worries in their lives that they try to alleviate with busyness. We find it hard to ‘sit at the feet of Jesus’ and truly accept the better part from him.
What is one take-away from your book that you hope readers identify with?
...I hope that my readers can see themselves in Martha. Martha was like many women: full of doubt, worried, and haunted by her past. Jesus met her where she was—in her doubt and pain and anxiety. Through him, she was able to grow in strength and faith and finally profess her firm belief in Jesus even in the face of her brother’s death.
You
Favorite writing snack:
...Peanut Butter M&Ms
Book you’re reading right now:
...The Crimson Cord: Rahab's Story by Jill Eileen Smith
If you could go anywhere in the world for one month (for free) where would it be and why?
...My dream trip is a month-long tour of New Zealand with my family. We are huge LOTR nerds!
Stephanie Landsem, author of The Living Water Series, writes historical fiction because she loves adventure in far-off times and places. In real life, she’s explored ancient ruins, medieval castles, and majestic cathedrals around the world. Stephanie is equally happy at home in Minnesota with her husband, four children, and three fat cats. When she’s not writing, she’s feeding the ravenous horde, avoiding housework, and dreaming about her next adventure—whether it be in person or on the page.
How to connect with Stephanie...
Website: www.stephanielandsem.com
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/6509583.Stephanie_Landsem
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/stephanielandsem
Twitter:https://twitter.com/#!/stephlandsem
Pinterest: http://pinterest.com/slandsem/
Purchase: The Tomb: A Novel of Martha (The Living Water Series)
Author Interview | Stephanie Landsem
You and Writing
...I love using maps in my research. I’m very visual and maps—whether a modern arial view of the Jordan river or an ancient hand-drawn map of Jerusalem—give me a firm grounding in my setting. I couldn’t visualize my story without them.
...I just found a great map website that I could explore for hours, The David Rumsey Historic Map collection can be found here http://www.davidrumsey.com/home. Another fun map website is Old Maps Online: http://project.oldmapsonline.org/ I’d highly recommend spending some time with them as you plot and write.
Your Writing
Tell us a little bit about your book.
...I like to describe the Tomb, A Novel of Martha, as a surprising story of Martha, Mary, and Lazarus. As I say in an introductory letter at the front of the book:
The Tomb: A Novel of Martha is not an attempt to recount the historical events that took place in Bethany two thousand years ago. Instead, it is a re-imagining of how Martha, a woman who was “anxious and worried about many things,” might have been transformed into the faith-filled woman of John 11:22, who said to Jesus—as her brother lay in his tomb—“Even now I know that whatever you ask of God, God will give you.”
We’ll never know Martha’s true story. Instead, I hope to bring to you her message: no matter what sins and doubts haunt our pasts, we can lay our worries and anxieties at Jesus’ feet, and he will, in return, give us “the better part.”Who is your favorite character and why?
...Like many women, I’ve always identified with Martha—the worrier, the worker—and as I suspected, she was my favorite character to write about in The Tomb. I loved exploring what made her so anxious because many women have some of the same hurts and worries in their lives that they try to alleviate with busyness. We find it hard to ‘sit at the feet of Jesus’ and truly accept the better part from him.
What is one take-away from your book that you hope readers identify with?
...I hope that my readers can see themselves in Martha. Martha was like many women: full of doubt, worried, and haunted by her past. Jesus met her where she was—in her doubt and pain and anxiety. Through him, she was able to grow in strength and faith and finally profess her firm belief in Jesus even in the face of her brother’s death.
You
Favorite writing snack:
...Peanut Butter M&Ms
Book you’re reading right now:
...The Crimson Cord: Rahab's Story by Jill Eileen Smith
If you could go anywhere in the world for one month (for free) where would it be and why?
...My dream trip is a month-long tour of New Zealand with my family. We are huge LOTR nerds!
Leave a comment below to enter to win a copy of The Tomb, A Novel of Martha!
(US entrants only, winner announced April 6)
_______________________
Thank you so much for being on the blog today Stephanie! I love your advice about maps. I've found myself working on a little side project working on what I'd call a "light" historical and I'm searching for maps all over the place! I'll need to take a look at those links. I also love your take on Mary and Martha's story (and let's not forget Lazrus). It's the beauty of fiction to take something that was and write what could have been! And, I am 100% with you on the New Zealand choice! I myself am a huge LOTR fan so I identify there ;)
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
Stephanie Landsem {Writer Wednesday}
A little bit about Stephanie...
Stephanie writes historical fiction because she loves adventure in far-off times and places. In real life, she's explored ancient ruins, medieval castles, and majestic cathedrals around the world. Stephanie is equally happy at home in Minnesota with her husband, four children, and three fat cats. When she's not writing, she's feeding the ravenous horde, avoiding housework, and dreaming about her next adventure - whether it be in person or on the page. She is a member of American Christian Fiction Writers and was a finalist for the ACFW Genesis contest in 2011. She then received a 3-book contract with Howard Books a few months following that.
How to connect with Stephanie...
Check out her Facebook author page
See her style and creativity on Pinterest
Follow her on twitter
Connect with her on Goodreads
Author Interview | Stephanie Landsem
You & Writing
Tell us a little bit about yourself: How did you start writing? What has kept you writing?
...The answer to both questions is: my kids. When my youngest daughter went into kindergarten, my oldest girl said, “Mom, what do YOU want to do?” I told her that I’d always wanted to write historical fiction, but I didn’t even know how to begin. She said, “Just figure it out, like you’re always telling us to do.” And she was right. It took many years, and I’m still figuring it out every day. And I’d say the kids keep me writing. They are a great encouragement and my biggest fans.
Your Writing
Tell us a little bit about your book or what you’re working on currently? Why are you/did you write it?
...I’m currently working on the second book in The Living Water Series, titled The Thief. Like The Well, I wanted to write about an encounter with Jesus, told from the viewpoint of a fictional character. The Thief is about a Roman centurion looking for peace and a prickly Jewish woman hiding a dangerous secret. An encounter with Jesus at the pool of Siloam, where Jesus gives a blind man his sight, changes both their lives.
Do you have a favorite character in this work? If so, why?
...I’d say my favorite character in The Thief is a Roman centurion named Longinus. We meet him in The Well, and he is pretty unlikeable. It was a challenge to develop his character and turn him into someone we grow to love by the end of this book.
Writing
Where do you find inspiration for your story/characters? Are they based on real life or pure imagination or both?
...I find great inspiration in the Bible, of course. So much is left out that it just begs me to fill in the blanks, and that’s where my imagination comes in. Many of my characters are drawn from people I’ve met in my travels, and some from my friends. I have a huge family, so I enjoy writing about the ups and downs of familial relationships.
When you write, what is your overall intention with your stories?
...My greatest wish would be for my readers to gain an authentic perspective of what it would have been like to live in Biblical times: to see the places Jesus walked, taste the food he might have eaten, and meet the people of his time. I’d love to help readers look at the familiar Bible stories with new eyes.
You
What is one thing you like to do to relax when you aren’t writing?
...I enjoy cooking, which is a good thing since I have four kids at home and three of them are teenagers! I love to try new recipes and my current favorite is Middle Eastern flavors. Lamb, couscous, feta, hummus, and olives are staples at my house this summer.
Thinking of Fathers Day, is there a story you’d like to share with the readers about your father?
...My dad is pretty awesome. For example, when I was in college, I called him and told him I wanted to change my major from chemistry to history. Dad, a man of few words, didn’t say what I knew he was thinking. What kind of job can a history major get? No, what he said was, “Do you love it?” And I answered, “Yes, I really love it.” After a long silence, in which I’m sure he was wondering if I’d be moving back in with him and Mom in three years, he said. “Then do it. Worry about the rest as it comes.” I’ve always been grateful to him for that.
What is one thing you are looking forward to for the Summer?
...I have one child finishing her first year of college and so I’m looking forward to the whole family being together again for a few months. Teenagers are busy, but we’ll have plenty of family time: going to church together, meals, movies, and plenty of time outside after a long Minnesota winter.
Stephanie writes historical fiction because she loves adventure in far-off times and places. In real life, she's explored ancient ruins, medieval castles, and majestic cathedrals around the world. Stephanie is equally happy at home in Minnesota with her husband, four children, and three fat cats. When she's not writing, she's feeding the ravenous horde, avoiding housework, and dreaming about her next adventure - whether it be in person or on the page. She is a member of American Christian Fiction Writers and was a finalist for the ACFW Genesis contest in 2011. She then received a 3-book contract with Howard Books a few months following that.
How to connect with Stephanie...
Check out her Facebook author page
See her style and creativity on Pinterest
Follow her on twitter
Connect with her on Goodreads
Author Interview | Stephanie Landsem
You & Writing
Tell us a little bit about yourself: How did you start writing? What has kept you writing?
...The answer to both questions is: my kids. When my youngest daughter went into kindergarten, my oldest girl said, “Mom, what do YOU want to do?” I told her that I’d always wanted to write historical fiction, but I didn’t even know how to begin. She said, “Just figure it out, like you’re always telling us to do.” And she was right. It took many years, and I’m still figuring it out every day. And I’d say the kids keep me writing. They are a great encouragement and my biggest fans.
Your Writing
Tell us a little bit about your book or what you’re working on currently? Why are you/did you write it?
...I’m currently working on the second book in The Living Water Series, titled The Thief. Like The Well, I wanted to write about an encounter with Jesus, told from the viewpoint of a fictional character. The Thief is about a Roman centurion looking for peace and a prickly Jewish woman hiding a dangerous secret. An encounter with Jesus at the pool of Siloam, where Jesus gives a blind man his sight, changes both their lives.
Do you have a favorite character in this work? If so, why?
...I’d say my favorite character in The Thief is a Roman centurion named Longinus. We meet him in The Well, and he is pretty unlikeable. It was a challenge to develop his character and turn him into someone we grow to love by the end of this book.
Writing
Where do you find inspiration for your story/characters? Are they based on real life or pure imagination or both?
...I find great inspiration in the Bible, of course. So much is left out that it just begs me to fill in the blanks, and that’s where my imagination comes in. Many of my characters are drawn from people I’ve met in my travels, and some from my friends. I have a huge family, so I enjoy writing about the ups and downs of familial relationships.
When you write, what is your overall intention with your stories?
...My greatest wish would be for my readers to gain an authentic perspective of what it would have been like to live in Biblical times: to see the places Jesus walked, taste the food he might have eaten, and meet the people of his time. I’d love to help readers look at the familiar Bible stories with new eyes.
You
What is one thing you like to do to relax when you aren’t writing?
...I enjoy cooking, which is a good thing since I have four kids at home and three of them are teenagers! I love to try new recipes and my current favorite is Middle Eastern flavors. Lamb, couscous, feta, hummus, and olives are staples at my house this summer.
Thinking of Fathers Day, is there a story you’d like to share with the readers about your father?
...My dad is pretty awesome. For example, when I was in college, I called him and told him I wanted to change my major from chemistry to history. Dad, a man of few words, didn’t say what I knew he was thinking. What kind of job can a history major get? No, what he said was, “Do you love it?” And I answered, “Yes, I really love it.” After a long silence, in which I’m sure he was wondering if I’d be moving back in with him and Mom in three years, he said. “Then do it. Worry about the rest as it comes.” I’ve always been grateful to him for that.
What is one thing you are looking forward to for the Summer?
...I have one child finishing her first year of college and so I’m looking forward to the whole family being together again for a few months. Teenagers are busy, but we’ll have plenty of family time: going to church together, meals, movies, and plenty of time outside after a long Minnesota winter.
______________________
Thank you so much for this great interview Stephanie and congratulations on your first release - The Well June 4th. I love that your kids were the influence it took to get you (and keep you) writing! How wonderful! I also love what you said about our dad. My dad is the same way - always supportive and encouraged me major in Music and Youth Ministry even though the obvious question was What job will you get? Can't wait to hear more about your future writing and thanks for being my guest!
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